Nearly 15 million households on food stamps

File photo of a store that accepts food stamps_20110117154159_JPG

File photo of a store that accepts food stamps. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Advertisement

Posted: 11/28/2012

The number of American households receiving food stamps jumped nearly 10% in 2011.

Nearly 15 million households were on food stamps at some point last year, up from 13.6 million in 2010, newly released Census data shows. That's an increase to 13%, up from 11.9% in 2010.

Some 47 states and the nation's capital experienced an increase in their residents receiving nutrition assistance, with the District of Columbia, Alabama and Hawaii seeing the largest jump. No state experienced a statistically significant decrease.

Oregon had the highest share of households receiving food stamps at 18.9%. Wyoming had the lowest at 5.9%.

The food stamp program has become a source of controversy in political circles as a record number of Americans signed up for nutrition assistance during the Great Recession. Though the economy is improving, participation is still rising, with a record 47.1 million people receiving food stamps this past August, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

During the campaign, Republican candidates attacked President Obama for increasing Americans' dependency on public assistance. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich called him the "food stamp president."

In a related report released Wednesday, the Census Bureau found that the number of households receiving public assistance cash payments in 2011 did not significantly increase from the year prior. This is the first time this has happened in several years.

Around 3.3 million households, or 2.9%, receive cash assistance, including Temporary Assistance to Needy Families and General Assistance, last year. TANF replaced what was commonly known as welfare, but it is time-limited and requires most adult recipients to work.

Four states -- Indiana, Iowa, New Hampshire and Utah -- and the District of Columbia saw decreases year-over-year. This is the first time in several years that states saw a decline.

TANF also became a flashpoint during the election, when Republican Mitt Romney ran ads charging that the Obama administration was loosening the work requirements on TANF.

Copyright CNN

  • Comments
Advertisement

National News


  1. 7 hurt when trains collide in Mo.

    7 hurt when trains collide in Mo.

    The National Transportation Safety Board has launched an investigation into the cause of a cargo train collision that partially collapsed a highway overpass Saturday in southeast Missouri, injuring seven people.

    • Judge: Ariz. sheriff profiles Latinos

      • OK teen gives hugs in devastated town

        • UFO spotted over California?

          • 15 unexpected struggles after disaster

            • US: Czech slaying suspect killed family

              • 18 hurt in shuttle bus crash in GA.

                 
                • Stay Connected

                Top Stories


                1. French soldier stabbed in throat

                  French soldier stabbed in throat

                  A French soldier was stabbed in the throat in a busy commercial district outside Paris on Saturday, and the government said it was trying to determine if there were any links to the brutal killing of a British soldier by suspected Islamic extremists.

                  • 7 hurt when trains collide in Mo.

                    • UK: More arrested in soldier's slaying

                      • Man dies in North Fairmount shooting

                      • Doctor charged in pregnant woman's death